Human Voices and the Wah Pedal

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    Human Voices and the Wah Pedal

    -or-

    Why a wah pedal sounds something like a voice, and why it doesn't sound more like one

    Copyright 1999 R.G. Keen. All rights reserved.

    The thing that makes a wah pedal so immediately catchy is that it has a real "vocal" quality - it sounds

    like a a human voice making that noise. Everyone has done a quiet little "waaah" with their mouth to

    imitate it.

    On the other hand, that's all it does. There's clearly something missing because it won't do anything but

    that "wah" sound. What's going on?

    People who study the human voice have provided a number of answers. If you take common voice sounds

    and calculate the frequency spectrum - that is, how loud is it at each separate frequency - you find some

    interesting features. There is a basic frequency, which is kind of like the basic note you hit with yourvoice when singing. Above that, there are at least three and often more resonant peaks. In voice research

    and musicology, such resonant peaks are often called "formants". A saxphone sounds different from a

    clarinet at least in part because the resonances associated with its different physical form cause different

    formants to be audible.

    To shorten a long story, us humans listen for and assign meaning to the relative spacing of the first three

    formants of the human vocal tract. We hear and notice the fundamental frequency, but that seems to be

    almost inconsequential in assigning meaning to vocal sounds. At most, we notice relative shifts of the

    fundamental frequency as denoting emotional states - as in someone's voice going up in pitch when

    they're under stress. The relative positioning of formants, and largely the first two formants, forms a kindof code that we interpret as vowel sounds. Here's one version of the decoding key, based on information

    from Bell Labs research into humal voice sounds early in the 1900's:

    man Voices and the Wah Pedal http://www.geofex.com/article_folders/wahpedl/voicewah.htm

    3 02/04/2012 13:02

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    While this chart implies that there are discrete regions where a sound is more like an "ee" than an "i"

    sound, that is an oversimplification. There are no real boundaries, only a continuous shading from one

    vowel sound to another. This is one source of regional accents - everybody in a "local area" kind of learnsfrom everyone else what they all agree will be an "ee" and an "ah", and they all use that "code" to talk to

    their friends. It's only when someone from somewhere else that uses a slightly different mix of formants

    comes in that they notice the differences.

    We can immediately pick up some things about wah pedals from the chart. The "ah" sound has a first

    formant resonance from about 700 to 1200 Hz. This matches almost exactly the typical range of the

    resonant peak in the semi-standard wah circuit. We can also see what's missing - the second formant. A

    wah pedal has only one resonant peak.

    However, it also is a lowpass filter with a resonant peak, not single frequency peaks like human vocal

    resonances. The presence of the frequencies below the resonance peak is an almost, kind of, maybe

    reminder of a "peak" lower than the resonance; at least it does not drop off much. As a result, we get a

    sound like the first and second formants are very close together - very much like the "ah" region.

    man Voices and the Wah Pedal http://www.geofex.com/article_folders/wahpedl/voicewah.htm

    3 02/04/2012 13:02

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    Here's another way of looking at wah frequency response:

    This shows the relative ranges of the first two formants along with the range of a typical wah pedal. The

    wah pedal range covers most of the frequencies where the first two formants overlap. Not surprisingly, a

    wah sounds something like a human voice, but not close enough to be really mistaken for a vowel sound.

    This does point the way to even more "vocal" sounds from a wah. A second resonance, even a fixed one,

    should make for more vowel-ey sounds. To really make it "talk" you could do a second wah circuit that

    has a resonance that moves around in a different manner than the first. This is exactly the trick employed

    in the Electro-Harmonix Talking Pedal.

    There's a pony here. Try using two wah pedals in series, with the first one rocked to one position and left

    sitting there, while you use the second one to modulate the sound. See what you think.

    In a later update, I'll describe some things that can be done to get more vowel-ey sounds with specially

    designed circuits.

    man Voices and the Wah Pedal http://www.geofex.com/article_folders/wahpedl/voicewah.htm

    3 02/04/2012 13:02